Andrew MacCallum
Andrew MacCallum | |
---|---|
Government School of Art at Nottingham. | |
Known for | Painter of landscape, genre scenes and Oriental life |
Movement | Orientalist |
Andrew McCullum (c. 1821–1902) was a British landscape painter.
Life
Born at Nottingham, of Scottish Highland background, he was son of an employee at the William Gibson & Sons hosiery manufactory there. He was brought up near Sherwood Forest, and unwillingly apprenticed against his will to his father's business. An interest in drawing was encouraged by Thomas Bailey who allowed him to copy pictures in his collection.[1]
On his 21st birthday McCallum left home, and maintained himself by teaching. Aged 22 twenty-two he became a student in the recently founded
In 1854 MacCallum went to Italy with a travelling studentship awarded by the
Towards the end of 1861 MacCallum painted at
MacCallum died on 22 January 1902 at 5 The Studios, Holland Park Road, Kensington, London. He had lived in the neighbourhood since 1858 when he leased from Thomas Webster his house in The Mall, Kensington.[1]
Works

MacCallum's reputation rested mainly on woodland subjects. He sent 53 pictures to the Royal Academy (1850–1886) and others to the

The
Family
MacCallum was twice married. His first marriage, in 1852, was to Susan Irlam Tetlow (1832-1871), the daughter of John Tetlow, a painter.[4] His second marriage, on 18 June 1879, was to Laura Salwey (born 1856), daughter of Ludlow solicitor Humphrey Salway.[5] At the time of their marriage, MacCallum was 57 to his wife's 25. MacCallum petitioned for a divorce from Laura in April 1888, on the grounds of her alleged adultery with Ernest Malleson.[6] During the divorce proceedings, Laura complained of cruelty on the part of MacCallum, arguing that he had tried to lock her up in a lunatic asylum when she was sane (his first wife had died in a private lunatic asylum).[7] The divorce was granted in 1889, with the jury finding that Laura MacCallum was guilty of adultery, but finding Andrew MacCallum not guilty of cruelty.[8] MacCallum had two sons by his second wife: Andrew Humphry Salwey MacCallum (1881-1972) and Alfred Erasmus Geoffrey MacCallum (1882-1933).[9] Both sons served in the Second Boer War.[1]
Notes
- ^ a b c d e f g h Lee, Sidney, ed. (1912). . Dictionary of National Biography (2nd supplement). Vol. 2. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- ^ Lee, Sidney, ed. (1912). . Dictionary of National Biography (2nd supplement). Vol. 1. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- ^ Khatib, H., Palestine and Egypt Under the Ottomans: Paintings, Books, Photographs, Maps and Manuscripts, I.B.Tauris, 2003, p. 114
- ^ Lunacy Patients Admissions Registers on www.ancestry.co.uk record that Susan McCallum was admitted to the Haydock Lodge Private Asylum at Newton-le-Willows on 31 March 1870 and died there on 1 July 1871, aged 38. She was buried on 3 July 1871 at St Thomas, Ashton-in-Makerfield, her death being ascribed to paralysis (burial registers for St Thomas, Ashton-in-Makerfield).
- ^ Marriages in the Ludlow district, June quarter of 1879 (volume 6a, page 967); 1871 census for The Cliffe, Whitcliffe Road, Bromfield, Shropshire.
- ^ The National Archives, Divorce Court File J77/401/2214 (1888)
- ^ Nottinghamshire Guardian, 16 February 1889, p.3
- ^ Nottinghamshire Guardian, 16 February 1889, p.3; Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper, 17 February 1889, p.8
- ^ Birth of Andrew Humphry Salwey MacCallum, Kensington 1881 (GRO, vol 1a, page 80); death in Basingstoke, 1972 (GRO, vol 6b, page 45s). Birth of Alfred Erasmus Geoffry [sic] MacCallum, Kensington, 1882 (GRO, vol 1a, page 130); death in Spain, 6 January 1933 and burial at Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife (www.findagrave.com)
External links
- 14 artworks by or after Andrew McCallum at the Art UK site
Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Lee, Sidney, ed. (1912). "MacCallum, Andrew". Dictionary of National Biography (2nd supplement). Vol. 2. London: Smith, Elder & Co.